Re: one more phrase from BBC

(It can help) when you can't remember where you were a night before a morning after.

I understood the phrase well, but would you tell me have I missed something or not. Does it have a sense when being writen like I did?

Thank you!

Still, the whole composition of that phrase does not look right...

It's British or Irish, and I think it was a part of a humorous quip, or funny story... in the normal British/Irish style of humor. I've heard this phrase before, in British English.

Composition of the phrase will change if it moves from fact to humor, or quip. Shakespeare, Mark Twain, and Winston Churchill, were masters at this, "playing with English". Look at my adjustment in my reply.

This is why I think it was the ending sentence ('punchline') of a funny story or quip, from BBC.

I understand the sentence perfectly... as probably an end sentence to a humorous story, or news-story, in British style.

Re: one more phrase from BBC

(It can help) when you can't remember where you were a night before a morning after.

I understood the phrase well, but would you tell me have I missed something or not. Does it have a sense when being writen like I did?

Thank you!

Still, the whole composition of that phrase does not look right...

It's British or Irish, and I think it was a part of a humorous quip, or funny story... in the normal British/Irish style of humor. I've heard this phrase before, in British English.

Composition of the phrase will change if it moves from fact to humor, or quip. Shakespeare, Mark Twain, and Winston Churchill, were masters at this, "playing with English". Look at my adjustment in my reply.

This is why I think it was the ending sentence ('punchline') of a funny story or quip, from BBC.

I understand the sentence perfectly... as probably an end sentence to a humorous story, or news-story, in British style.